BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates generally to a medical cancer therapy facility and, more particularly, to a medical particle delivery system having a compact gantry design.
It has been known in the art to use a particle accelerator, such as a synchrotron, and a gantry arrangement to deliver a beam of particles, such as protons, from a single source to one of a plurality of patient treatment stations for cancer therapy. In such systems, the cancerous tumor will be hit and destroyed by particles in a precise way with a localized energy deposition. Thus, the number of ion interactions on the way to the tumor through the healthy body cells is dramatically smaller than by any other radiation method. A position of the center of the tumor inside the body defines a value of the particle energy. The transverse beam raster is defined by the transverse size of the tumor with respect to the beam, while the width of the tumor defines the beam energy range. The energy deposition is localized around the “Brag” peak of the “implanted particles” and remaining energy is lost due to particle interaction with the tumor cells.
Such cancer treatment facilities are widely known throughout the world. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,870,287 to Cole et al. discloses a multi-station proton beam therapy system for selectively generating and transporting proton beams from a single proton source and accelerator to one of a plurality of patient treatment stations each having a rotatable gantry for delivering the proton beams at different angles to the patients. A duoplasmatron ion source generates the protons which are then injected into an accelerator at 1.7 MeV. The accelerator is a synchrotron containing ring dipoles, zero-gradient dipoles with edge focusing, vertical trim dipoles, horizontal trim dipoles, trim quadrupoles and extraction Lambertson magnets.
The beam delivery portion of the Cole et al. system includes a switchyard and gantry arrangement. The switchyard utilizes switching magnets that selectively direct the proton beam to the desired patient treatment station. Each patient treatment station includes a gantry having an arrangement of bending dipole magnets and focusing quadrupole magnets. The gantry is fully rotatable about a given axis so that the proton beam may be delivered at any desired angle to the patient.
The gantry of typical particle beam cancer therapy systems accepts a particle beam of a required energy from the accelerator and projects it with a high precision toward a cancerous tumor within a patient. The beam from the gantry must be angularly adjustable so that the beam can be directed into the patient from above and all sides. Because of these requirements, the gantry of a conventional particle beam cancer therapy facility is typically the most expensive piece of equipment of the treatment facility and its magnets are generally very large and heavy.
For example, the proton-carbon medical therapy facility described by R. Fuchs and P. Emde in “The Heavy Ion Gantry of the HICAT Facility” includes an isocentric gantry system for delivery of protons, Helium, Carbon and Oxygen ions to patients. The gantry system has a total weight of 630 tons and the required beam line elements for transporting and delivering fully stripped Carbon and Oxygen ions with 430 MeV/nucleon kinetic energy have a total weight of 135 tons. The rotating part of the isocentric gantry system weighs about 570 tons due to its role to safely transport and precisely delivers ions to the patients.
Advances in particle accelerator design have resulted in accelerators utilizing smaller and less complex magnet arrangements. For example, a nonscaling fixed field alternating gradient (FFAG) accelerator has recently been developed which utilizes fixed field magnets, as opposed to much larger and more complex variable magnetic field coil magnets. Such advances, however, have heretofore not been applied to the gantry design of typical cancer therapy facilities.
Accordingly, it would be desirable to improve upon the prior art medical cancer therapy facilities by providing a simpler, less expensive and more compact gantry design utilizing some of the advances made in the field of particle accelerators.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention is a particle therapy gantry for delivering a particle beam to a patient. The gantry generally includes a beam tube having a curvature defining a particle beam path and a plurality of fixed field magnets sequentially arranged along the beam tube for guiding the particle beam along the particle path.
In a preferred embodiment, each of the fixed field magnets is a combined function magnet performing a first function of bending the particle beam along the particle path and a second function of focusing or defocusing the particle beam. Also, the magnets are preferably arranged in triplets, wherein each triplet has two focusing magnets and one defocusing magnet disposed between the focusing magnets. The focusing magnets perform the combined function of bending the particle beam and focusing the particle beam and the defocusing magnet performs the combined function of bending the particle beam and defocusing the particle beam. The defocusing magnets are preferably positive bending magnets for bending the particle beam along an arc defined by a positive center of curvature and the focusing magnets are preferably negative bending magnets for bending the particle beam along an arc defined by a negative center of curvature, wherein the positive and negative centers of curvature are oriented on opposite sides of the beam pipe.
In one embodiment, the fixed field magnets are permanent magnets including a ferromagnetic core having a curvature defined by a center of curvature and forming a beam tube receiving cavity having the beam tube supported therein. The core is shaped to provide a magnetic field in the beam tube which grows stronger in a direction toward the core center of curvature. In an alternative embodiment, the fixed field magnets include superconducting coils adjacent the beam tube for providing the combined function.
In either case, the beam tube of the gantry preferably includes a particle beam entry point, a transition point, a particle beam exit point, a first curved particle beam path arc length extending between the entry point and the transition point and a second curved particle beam path arc length extending between the transition point and the exit point. The first arc length bends about ninety degrees and the second arc length bends about one hundred eighty degrees in a direction opposite the first arc length. Two half-triplets are preferably disposed in juxtaposed orientation at the beam tube transition point and a half-triplet is preferably disposed at each of the beam tube entry point and the beam tube exit point. Each of the half-triplets includes a defocusing magnet and a focusing magnet.
The present invention further involves a method for delivering a particle beam to a patient through a gantry. The method generally includes the steps of bending the particle beam with a plurality of fixed field magnets sequentially arranged along a beam tube of the gantry, wherein the particle beam travels in the beam tube, and alternately focusing and defocusing the particle beam traveling in the beam tube with alternately arranged combined function focusing and defocusing fixed field magnets.
In a preferred embodiment, the combined function fixed field magnets are arranged in triplets, wherein each triplet includes two focusing magnets and one defocusing magnet disposed between the focusing magnets. The focusing magnets perform the combined function of bending the particle beam and focusing the particle beam and the defocusing magnet performs the combined function of bending the particle beam and defocusing the particle beam. The defocusing magnets are preferably positive bending magnets for bending the particle beam along an arc defined by a positive center of curvature and the focusing magnets are preferably negative bending magnets for bending the particle beam along an arc defined by a negative center of curvature, wherein the positive and negative centers of curvature are oriented on opposite sides of the beam pipe.
The gantry of the present invention may be utilized in a medical particle beam therapy system having a source of particles, a particle accelerator, an injector for transporting particles from the source to the accelerator, one or more patient treatment stations including rotatable gantries of the present invention for delivering a particle beam to a patient and a beam transport system for transporting the accelerated beam from the accelerator to the patient treatment station.
The preferred embodiments of the particle beam gantry of the present invention, as well as other objects, features and advantages of this invention, will be apparent from the following detailed description, which is to be read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. The scope of the invention will be pointed out in the claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSFIG. 1 is a top plan view of a typical medical particle delivery therapy facility.
FIG. 2 is a side view of the arrangement of the gantry treatment room of the medical facility shown inFIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of the gantry according to the present invention.
FIG. 4 is a graphical representation of one of the magnet triplets forming the gantry of the present invention.
FIG. 5 is another a graphical representation of one of the magnet triplets forming the gantry of the present invention.
FIG. 6 is an isometric view of one of the magnet triplets forming the gantry of the present invention.
FIG. 7 is a graph showing the horizontal and vertical betatron functions and the dispersion function of a magnet triplet at the reference momentum.
FIG. 8 is a graph showing the minimum required aperture for a combined function magnet with a defocusing gradient.
FIG. 9 is a graph showing the minimum required aperture for a combined function magnet with an opposite bend and focusing field.
FIG. 10 is a cross-sectional view of the combined function bending/defocusing magnet shown inFIG. 5, taken along line10-10.
FIG. 11 is a cross-sectional view of the combined function bending/focusing magnet shown inFIG. 5, taken along line11-11.
FIG. 12 is a cross-sectional view of a fixed field combined function magnet utilizing superconducting tapes or coils without an iron core.
FIG. 13 shows a cross-sectional view of a similar superconducting magnet having a super ferric core and superconducting coils surrounding the beam tube.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTSFIG. 1 shows a typical medical particledelivery therapy facility10. Thefacility10 generally includes aninjector12, aparticle accelerator14, and abeam delivery network16 including a rotatablegantry treatment room18 for delivering a beam to a patient. Thebeam delivery network16 may also be designed to divert independent beams to various other applications as desired. For example, thebeam delivery network16 may be designed to deliver a beam to a beam research room20 and a fixedbeam treatment room22. The research room20 may be provided for research and calibration purposes, with an entrance separate from the patient areas, while the fixedbeam treatment room22 may include separate beam lines for such therapeutic applications, such as eye treatments.
Thebeam injector module12 can be a conventional LINAC or a tandem Van de Graaf injector with an injection kicker, which completes the task of particle injection into theaccelerator14. In the case of proton particles, the injector typically provides proton beam pulses at 30 Hz with a pulse width varying between 25 and 100 nanoseconds at a delivered energy of 7 MeV.
Theparticle accelerator14 can be a synchrotron, cyclotron or some other conventional design known in the prior art. Theaccelerator14 accelerates particles to a desired energy level for extraction and delivery to thepatient treatment rooms18 and22. Variation of the extraction energy is achieved by adjusting, for example, an RF frequency within theaccelerator14. Again for proton particles, extraction typically occurs when the kinetic energy of the particles is in therange 60 to 250 MeV.
Thebeam delivery network16 connects theaccelerator14 to thetreatment rooms18 and22 and the beam research room20. Thenetwork16 generally includes anextraction line26, aswitchyard28 and a plurality of beam transport lines30. Theswitchyard28 is typically an arrangement of switching magnets for diverting the particle beam to a desiredbeam line30. Thebeam transport lines30 take the particle beam from theswitchyard28 to the different treatment rooms of the facility.
Referring additionally toFIG. 2, the rotatablegantry treatment room18 includes arotating gantry24, which is rotatable by plus or minus 200 degrees from the vertical about a point ofrotation32 to deliver a particle beam to a patient33 at a gantry iso-center34. The gantry system accepts particles already accelerated to required energy. Thefirst part24aof the gantry bends particles within a quarter of a circle for 90 degrees. Thesecond part24bof the gantry bends the particles in a half of a circle and brings the particles straight towards the required direction34.
Thegantry24 is constructed as a three-dimensional structure supported on the treatment room side by abearing36 and, on the beam inlet side, by abearing38. Thegantry24 is further preferably balanced around its rotation axis. Gantry movement can be realized by a gear motor/gear ring drive40 that allows high precision positioning. Eachgantry24 is preferably controlled by means of an individual independent computer unit that ensures mutual braking of the main drive units, soft start and soft deceleration functions, control of the auxiliary drive units for the treatment room, and supervision of the limit switches. Thegantry24 further includes anozzle42 for delivering the particle beam to thepatient33.
Referring now toFIG. 3, the optical components of thegantry24 according to the present invention are shown. Thegantry24 generally includes a hook-shapedbeam pipe44 and a series of identical fixed-field magnet triplets46 arranged in sequence around the beam pipe. Thebeam pipe44 can be provided as a continuous pipe, or it can be assembled from a plurality of beam pipe segments welded or otherwise fastened together in a conventional manner. Thebeam pipe44 and themagnet triplets46 are enclosed in agantry housing47.
Referring additionally toFIGS. 4-6, themagnet triplet46 is considered the “unit cell” and contains a relatively long combined function bending/defocusing magnet (QD)48 flanked by a pair of shorter combined function bending/focusing magnets (QF)50. Thecell46 is symmetric with respect to the center of the defocusingmagnet48.
Thus, thegantry24 is made of densely packed identical “triplet” cells45. Three combined function magnets make a cell. Thecentral magnet48 produces major bending and has a linear horizontal defocusing gradient. Two smaller identical butopposite bending magnets50 are placed on both sides of themajor bending magnet48. They have a linear focusing gradient. Each of the combinedfunction magnets48 and50 performs two functions. The first function is to bend the particle beam along an orbital path, while the second function is to focus or defocus the particle beam as it travels around the path.
The defocusing magnet (QD)48 has a strong central field and a negative gradient (horizontally defocusing) at the center, while the focusing magnets (QF)50 have a positive gradient (horizontally focusing). Bothmagnets48 and50 are fixed field dipole-type magnets using a very strong focusing and small dispersion function. The horizontal and vertical betatron functions βx and βy and the dispersion function in thebasic cell46, at the reference momentum, are shown inFIG. 7. The minimum required aperture for the two combined function magnets major bend with the defocusing gradient and the opposite bend with the focusing field are presented inFIGS. 8 and 9, respectively.
Thus, the QD andQF magnets48 and50 are arranged in a non-scaling, fixed field alternating gradient (FFAG) configuration. Such FFAG configurations have been used before in particle accelerators, but have heretofore never been proposed in a therapeutic particle delivery gantry of a medical facility.
Also, both types ofmagnets48 and50 are somewhat arc-shaped or wedge-shaped when viewed in a direction perpendicular to the path of thebeam pipe44. Thus, eachmagnet48 and50 is defined by anaxis48aand50a, which may represent the center of curvature in the case of an arc-shaped magnet, or an intersection point of the two outside faces in the case of a wedge-shaped magnet.
In either case, each defocusing magnet (QD)48 of eachmagnet triplet46 is arranged along thebeam pipe44 so that itsaxis48afalls on the same side of thebeam pipe44 as the beam pipe's center ofcurvature44a. Conversely, each flanking pair of focusing (QF)magnets50 of each magnet triplet is arranged along thebeam pipe44 so that theiraxes50afalls on the opposite side of thebeam pipe44 as the beam pipe's center ofcurvature44a. In this manner, each defocusing magnet (QD)48 can be termed a “positive bending” magnet, wherein the shape and arrangement of this magnet bends the particles passing therethrough in a path generally matching the curvature of the beam pipe, as shown inFIGS. 3-6. Each focusing magnet (QD)50, on the other hand, can be termed a “negative bending” magnet, wherein the shape and arrangement of these magnets bend the particles passing therethrough in a path generally opposite to the curvature of the beam pipe. It has been found that such alternating arrangement of positive and negative bending magnets results in a particle beam having a reduced dispersion.
Referring now toFIG. 10, each defocusing magnet (QD)48 includes aferromagnetic core52 made up of an upper53 and alower half54 forming a dipole magnet. The upper53 andlower halves54 are identical in cross-section and can be solid ferromagnetic masses, as shown inFIG. 10, or they can be made from a series of stacked laminates. In either case, theupper core half53 includes anangled face53aand the lower core half includes anangled face54a. The angled faces53aand54aof the upper and lower core halves53 and54 face each other and form a beampipe receiving cavity56 when the core halves are assembled together to form themagnet core52.
Referring toFIG. 11, each focusing magnet (QF)48 is similarly constructed. Specifically, each focusingmagnet50 includes aferromagnetic core58 made up of an upper59 and alower half60 forming a dipole magnet. Again, the upper59 andlower halves60 can be solid ferromagnetic masses or they can be made from a series of stacked laminates55. Also, theupper core half59 includes anangled face59aand the lower core half includes anangled face60a. The angled faces59aand60aof the upper and lower core halves59 and60 face each other and form a beampipe receiving cavity62 when the core halves are assembled together to form themagnet core58.
As mentioned above, eachmagnet48 and50 is a combined function arc magnet combining the functions of bending the particle beam and focusing or defocusing the particle beam. The bending function is achieved by the curvature of the magnet, while the focusing or defocusing function is achieved by the arrangement of themagnet cores52,58.
In particular, the upper53 and the lower54 halves of the defocusingmagnet core52 are arranged together respectively above and below thebeam pipe44 so as to provide a magnetic field in the beam pipe which grows stronger in a direction toward the center ofcurvature48aof the core, as shown inFIG. 10, whereas the upper and thelower halves59 and60 of a focusingmagnet core58 are arranged together respectively above and below the beam pipe so as to provide a magnetic field in the beam pipe which grows weaker in a direction toward the center of curvature of the defocusingcore48a, but which grows stronger in a direction toward the center ofcurvature50aof its own core.
Thus, in a defocusing combinedfunction magnet48, as shown inFIG. 10, a proton, or other particle, in thebeam pipe44 radially further from the core center ofcurvature48aand the beam pipe center ofcurvature44a(to the right inFIG. 10) is subject to a weaker magnetic field and bends less, while a proton, or other particle, closer to the beam pipe center of curvature (to the left inFIG. 10) sees a stronger magnetic field and bends more. This results in a more dispersed horizontal concentration of protons, but a denser vertical concentration, in the beam pipe just downstream of a defocusing combined function magnet.
Conversely, in a focusing combinedfunction magnet50, as shown inFIG. 11, a proton, or other particle, in thebeam pipe44 radially further from the beam pipe center ofcurvature44a, or closer to the core center ofcurvature50a, (to the right inFIG. 11) is subject to a stronger magnetic field and bends more, while a proton closer to the beam pipe center of curvature, or away from the core center of curvature, (to the left inFIG. 11) sees a weaker magnetic field and bends less. This results in a greater horizontal concentration of particles, but a weaker vertical concentration of particles in the beam pipe just downstream of a focusing combined function magnet.
The above defocusing effect is achieved by orienting theangled surfaces53aand54aof the upper and lower core halves53 and54 of the defocusingmagnet core52 so that they form anintersection point64 that falls on the same side of thebeam pipe44 as the beam pipe center ofcurvature44a, as shown inFIG. 10. A focusingmagnet50 is formed by orienting theangled surfaces59aand60aof the upper and lower core halves59 and60 of the focusingmagnet core58 so that they form anintersection point66 that falls on the side of thebeam pipe44 opposite the beam pipe center ofcurvature44a, as shown inFIG. 11. In other words, the angled faces53aand54aof a defocusingmagnet48 meet adjacent the inner arc of thebeam pipe44, whereas the angled faces59aand60aof a focusingmagnet50 meet adjacent the outer arc of the beam pipe, with respect to the center ofcurvature44aof the beam pipe.
Accordingly, not only are the positive and negative bending functions alternately arranged, but also the focusing and defocusing functions of the magnets are alternately arranged. Such alternate arrangement of the positive and negative bending and the focusing and defocusing functions provides to the present invention the feature of net strong particle beam focusing in both horizontal and vertical planes.
At thetransition point68 of thegantry24, where thebeam pipe44 reverses its curvature, and/or at thebeam entry point70 and/or at the beam exit point74, modifications of themagnet triplet46 can be utilized to provide the desired bending and focusing/defocusing functions. For example, a half-triplet76 consisting of a single negative-bend focusing magnet50 and a reduced length, positivebend defocusing magnet48acan be utilized at thebeam entry point76 and/or thebeam exit point72 of the gantry to achieve the desired bend angle and focusing at these points. Similarly, at the beam pipecurvature transition point68, two half-triplets76, as described above, can be assembled together in a juxtaposed orientation to form a “straight”magnet triplet78.
For proton therapy systems, the combinedfunction defocusing magnet48 and the combinedfunction focusing magnet50 used in the gantry can be very small permanent magnets, as described above. For example, a suitable magnetic field of about 1.8 T can be achieved using defocusingmagnets48 that measure about 6 cm×8 cm×10 cm. For larger particles, such as carbon, the magnets can utilize high-temperature superconductor tapes (HTS) or superconducting Niobium-Tin coils to achieve the required greater magnetic fields of about 6 T. In either case, the magnets are still fixed-field magnets.
FIG. 12 shows a cross-section of a fixed field combinedfunction magnet80 utilizing high-temperature superconductor tapes (HTS) or superconducting Niobium-Tin coils82 surrounding thebeam tube44, without an iron core.FIG. 13 shows a cross-section of asimilar superconducting magnet84 having a superferric core86 andsuperconducting coils88 surrounding thebeam tube44.
As a result of the present invention, the size of the gantry in a particle therapy facility can be dramatically reduced and the control system for a gantry treatment room can be greatly simplified. Specifically, thegantry24 can be made about 20 meters long, from therotation point32 to the iso-center34, with a height of about 3.2 meters. Thegantry24 preferably has a free space of about 1.6 meters from the last magnet to the isocenter34.
Thus, the present gantry invention reduces the weight of the gantry system by using a non-scaling Fixed Field Alternating Gradient (FFAG) triplet structure with permanent, superconducting or high-temperature superconducting combined function magnets. This invention allows a very close control of focused ion transport through the beam line with different energies but under the fixed magnetic field. The ions are delivered to the isocentric non-scaling FFAG gantry system at the same entrance position. This invention can achieve presented goals due to a very large momentum acceptance and very strong focusing properties of the non-scaling FFAG structures. The ions with different energies transported through the system arrive at the end of it with small differences in positions (−2.5 up to +3.2 mm) easily adjusted by the raster-scanning focusing part of the gantry.
Although preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described herein with reference to the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to those precise embodiments and that various other changes and modifications may be affected herein by one skilled in the art without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention, and that it is intended to claim all such changes and modifications that fall within the scope of the invention.